Worship in Spirit and Truth + The Real Timeline of Jesus | 3 Days and 3 Nights Explained (Part 2-2)
Failed to add items
Add to cart failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
Written by:
About this listen
Send us Fan Mail
What does it mean to worship God in truth—and are we willing to test what we’ve inherited?
In this episode of Modern Mind, Ancient Book, we move from historical contrast to personal alignment, examining how worship, truth, and the resurrection timeline intersect.
For the Christian seeker, this teaching bridges ancient biblical structure, historical scholarship, and the life of Jesus Christ.
⸻
PART 3 — Worship in Spirit and Truth
•Worship must align with truth—not just tradition
•Truth includes:
•What God commanded
•How Jesus lived
•What Scripture actually says
Gospel of John 4:23–24 defines true worship:
“God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”
This raises a necessary tension:
•Scripture allows interpretation
•But it demands honesty about competing readings
We also address a critical issue:
•Religious systems can drift into burden, profit, and distortion
•The very pattern Jesus confronted in His time can reappear in later institutions
This is not a call to abandon tradition—
it is a call to test it against truth.
⸻
PART 4 — The Timeline Reconstructed (AD 30 Model)
Can the Bible’s timeline actually support:
•Passover alignment
•Three days and three nights
•A Sunday resurrection
•Firstfruits fulfillment
This episode walks through a historically argued model anchored in:
•14 Nisan = Wednesday, April 3, AD 30
•Resurrection = Sunday, April 7
⸻
KEY FRAMEWORKS EXPLAINED
1. Biblical Calendar Structure
•Passover → 14 Nisan
•Unleavened Bread → 15–21 Nisan
•Firstfruits → “day after the Sabbath” (Leviticus 23)
2. Two Historical Day Reckonings
Judean Model (Temple-centered):
•Sunset → Sunset
Galilean Model (proposed):
•Sunrise → Sunrise
These differences are supported in scholarship and help explain how:
•The same moment in time
•Can carry two different date labels
⸻
3. Three Days and Three Nights (Matthew 12:40)
This model allows for a literal reading of Jesus’ words:
•Day 1: Wednesday (Crucifixion)
•Night 1: Wednesday night
•Day 2: Thursday (High Sabbath)
•Night 2: Thursday night
•Day 3: Friday
•Night 3: Friday night
•Day 4: Saturday (Weekly Sabbath completed)
Resurrection occurs after Sabbath, before dawn Sunday
(Gospel of Matthew 28:1)
⸻
4. Firstfruits Fulfilled
Book of Leviticus 23:11:
“On the day after the Sabbath…”
First Epistle to the Corinthians 15:20:
“Christ… the first fruits of those who are asleep.”
Two historically valid interpretations exist:
•Weekly Sabbath → Sunday Firstfruits
•Festival Sabbath → 16 Nisan Firstfruits
Key Insight:
Both readings are ancient. The Sunday reading aligns with resurrection theology—but must be presented honestly as one historical interpretation among others.
⸻
WHY THIS MATTERS
This teaching demonstrates:
•The Bible’s timeline is coherent and reconstructable
•Jesus’ death aligns with Passover
•His resurrection aligns with Firstfruits
•The “three days and three nights” can be understood literally
Most importantly:
It calls believers to move beyond inherited assumptions and into truth-centered worship.
⸻
KEY SCRIPTURE (NASB)
John 4:23–24
“God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”
Matthew 12:40
“For just as Jonah was in the stomach of the sea monster for three days and three nights…”
Leviticus 23:11
“On the day after the Sabbath the priest shall wave it.”
⸻